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Welcome back to the human rights roundup, a regular bulletin of all the law we haven’t quite managed to feature in full blog posts. The full list of links can be found here. You can also find our table of human rights cases here and previous roundups here.

First, if you know an individual, campaign group or NGO which deserves to have its local or national human rights work recognised, nominations for The Liberty Human Rights Award close on 30th September 2011, so there’s still time to get nominating!

by Graeme Hall

In the news

Gagging the press

In an uncompromising piece in the Guardian, Geoffrey Robertson QC attacks the attempt of the Metropolitan Police to use the Official Secrets Act 1989 (OSA) to force the Guardian to disclose its source(s) which revealed the hacking of Milly Dowlers’ phone. Robertson not only describes Scotland Yard’s recourse to the OSA “blunderbuss” as misguided given that there is no evidence of the Guardian “inciting” this information from the police, but he also urges Parliament to revisit the OSA and insert a public interest defence to protect press freedom.

The Law and Lawyers blog assists greatly with understanding the background to this story. Click here for Obiter J’s history to the OSA and here for the potential legal wranglings involved. It is clear from Obiter J and Robertson’s pieces that Article 10 of the European Convention on Human Rights, which protects freedom of expression, will be crucial in any legal proceedings, should it come to that. In the meantime, Robertson’s insistence that the Attorney General must stop this prosecution may well bear fruit as it is reported that not only is pressure increasing on Dominic Grieve but also that the deputy prime minister is sympathetic to the Guardian’s cause.

The concept of equality, and the role it plays in the UK’s constitution, was recently described by Colm O’Cinneide on the UK Constitutional Law Group blog as “patchy or uncertain [being] usually the result of legislative intervention or the jurisprudence of the European courts” with domestic “common law standards remaining relatively underdeveloped.” Nonetheless, despite its (domestic) shortfalls, equality and anti-discrimination continue to take centre stage in current affairs.

The Equality and Human Rights Commission’s (EHRC) report Hidden in plain sight: Inquiry into disability related harassment has been published. Adam Wagner has produced a summary of the report’s findings here. The report makes seven recommendations including better data, training and support. It also concludes that disability related harassment is “wide spread… largely unseen [and] its seriousness rarely acknowledged”, leaving individuals feeling disempowered, marginalised and excluded.

Equality also raises its head in a case discussed by Tom Hennessey of Halsbury’s Law Exchange. Waterstone’s faces legal challenges after mandating that its workers speak English during work hours. Hennessey notes that discrimination and employment guidelines from one of EHRC’s ancestors, the Commission for Racial Equality, will come into play, and that this case may contain thornier issues than it would seem at first blush.

At the margins

As keen supporters of factually correct reporting, it’s heartening to see the UK Immigration Law Blog outlining the benefits which those seeking asylum are entitled to. The reality of what asylum seekers are expected to live on is sobering, and the misreporting of such entitlements can cause resentment and ill-feeling. So, as the post suggests, complain when you encounter such shoddy journalism.

Liberty has written a blog hailing the Human Rights Act as the foundation for the arrests of those involved in the slavery of vulnerable people at a Travellers’ site in Bedfordshire. It is unnerving that specific laws did not exist to prevent people being held in forced servitude until 2010.

Other roundups:

The Eutopia Law blog has produced a roundup, Seven Days in Europe, summarising the European financial crisis, changes to music royalties and drunk elks, amongst others. The Week That Was roundup reminds us of two important Bills enacted this week; one regarding fixed term parliaments, the other concerning the election of Police Commissioners and the requirement to gain the DPP’s permission to secure an arrest warrant against those suspected of war crimes (see Ministry of Justice press release).

Disclaimer

This blog is maintained for information purposes only. It is not intended to be a source of legal advice and must not be relied upon as such. Blog posts reflect the views and opinions of their individual authors, not of chambers as a whole.

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Disclaimer: This blog is maintained for information purposes only. It is not intended to be a source of legal advice and must not be relied upon as such. Blog posts reflect the views and opinions of their individual authors, not of chambers as a whole.